Raskolnikov And Marmeladov In Crime And Punishment: Book Analysis

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Raskolnikov and Marmeladov from Crime and Punishment suffer from depression, which remains underrated by the general public today. The public remains uneducated on depression and mental illnesses, since only 3% of the adult population struggles with mental disabilities (qtd. BJS, Noonan and Trotter, 10). However, many criminals suffer from mental disabilities; the Bureau of Justice Statistics reported over 40% of inmates suffered a mental disorder (qtd. BJS, Noonan and Trotter, 10). Similar to prisoners today, Dostoyevsky’s characters, Raskolnikov and Marmeladov struggle with mental disabilities, which remain untreated in and out of prisons.
Raskolnikov suffers from split personality and schizophrenia; he commits the murder of Alyona Ivanovna, because the socio-economic pressures of society drove him to his …show more content…

Throughout the novel, Raskolnikov consists of two different personalities; one represents the humane side, while the other represents the selfish, inhumane side (Uwasomba, 290). The inhumane side encourages the murder of Alyona Ivanovna, and convinces him to create something of himself by becoming the Robin Hood of his community. Like Raskolnikov, many others are also “suffocated by poverty,” so he decides to take the life of Ivanovna for his people (Dostoyevsky, 4). However, it’s ironic he commits murder for his community, because he struggles with schizophrenia and remains “socially withdrawn reclusive, [and] alone” (Uwasomba 292). Instead of sharing the items he robbed like Robin Hood, he hides the items under a rock, and becomes more withdrawn (Dostoyevsky, 103). The guilt of the murders encaged him in his internal prison, where he became so reclusive he was only able to truthfully speak with Sonia, at the end of the novel when he confesses his crimes and sins to her (Dostoyevsky, 391). Although Raskolnikov’s “free to roam the streets, he cannot escape the return to a

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